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Thread: Ice storm. High winds and power outage

  1. #1
    Boolit Grand Master tazman's Avatar
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    Ice storm. High winds and power outage

    We had an ice storm today followed by high winds. Now a power outage.
    The winds are supposed to continue for another day.
    I wonder how long it will take the power company to get the power back on.
    Supposed to be fairly cold tonight.

  2. #2
    Boolit Master

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    Winter finally showed up.
    Political correctness is a national suicide pact.

    I am a sovereign individual, accountable
    only to God and my own conscience.

  3. #3
    Boolit Master Moleman-'s Avatar
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    We had that last week, Generator broke the second night about 2am. Was able to rent one that day and of course the power came back on that night since we were covered. The breaker was good, AVR (fancy voltage regulator) was good, brushes were good, L&R fields were good, but the rotor had no continuity. Took it apart and found a broken wire on one of the slip ring solder tabs. Soldered it back on and it'll run the house again. We're getting the same storm system hitting us that you're getting with freezing rain and snow. If we lose power at least the generator is back up. Longest so far has been 5 days from an ice storm. Awfully nice to have water since we're on a well.

  4. #4
    Boolit Grand Master tazman's Avatar
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    The power went off here about 3PM. It just now came back on so not such a bad deal.
    Pictures and stories from all over the area about white outs, power poles down, and cars in the ditches everywhere.
    Winter has arrived with a vengeance.

  5. #5
    Boolit Grand Master
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    I have two generators, plus I hold 150-200 gallons of fuel on site. I can go a month without power by cycling and not running the generator continuously. If my primary generator starts, I will, and have, loaned my spare to neighbors.

    Everyone should be prepared. Even a small generator can make a power outage bearable.
    Don Verna


  6. #6
    Boolit Bub
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    Tazman , you must be north of me a ways, I live north of Grafton, we just got rain and wind. stay safe

  7. #7
    Boolit Master



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    Quote Originally Posted by dverna View Post
    I have two generators, plus I hold 150-200 gallons of fuel on site. I can go a month without power by cycling and not running the generator continuously. If my primary generator starts, I will, and have, loaned my spare to neighbors.

    Everyone should be prepared. Even a small generator can make a power outage bearable.
    My brother got through an ice storm in OKC with one 1200W inverter, a 12V battery, and a VW with a clutch to recharge the battery for more than a week. It was enough to run the heater element in his electric oven and a light or two. He was prepped compared to his neighbors!

  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master

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    Glad your power came back on. I worked a many of those storms. Its cold miserable work! I've worked a few storms where the customers were off between 10 days and 2 weeks. Thats a long time and I felt for them. When I retired I used my vacation check to buy a generator being how I didn't have a bucket truck parked in the driveway anymore!

  9. #9
    Boolit Master
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    I for one really admire and appreciate power company linemen. Lightman, thank you for the unsung work you did during your career and thank you to all other retired and current line folks!

    It sure ain’t a job for sissies. I have never climbed a pole but I have on occasion climbed our well drill mast and can tell those that have never done so can be thankful they missed the opportunity. I had the regular safety harness and climbing belt but the “killer” for me was how much your legs and feet ache during and after a long climb.

    And then there are the inherent dangers of electrocution.

    Three44s
    Quote Originally Posted by Bret4207

    “There is more to this than dumping lead in a hole.”

  10. #10
    Boolit Master
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    Just wind and rain here in St. Louis. And its supposed to be 48 tmro. Feels like a heat wave.

  11. #11
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    I was a lineman for over 30 years. I know how outages go and especially wide spread outages. You can get a generator that will run your whole house in an emergency for the cost of one gun or a decent scope. Like lightman I no longer have access to a truck or the ability to prioritize my home in an outage. We don't have outages as long as hes seen but I have seen 3 day outages and just the contents of my 3 freezers is worth more then the one time cost of a generator. Told my wife a few years ago when we had a couple day outage that just being able to have a cup of coffee that morning paid for the generator in my eyes. that said when your home a thing its miserable being without your coffee pot or tv remember theres lineman out there in the rain, lightning and snow that are a lot more miserable then you and want that outage over much more they you do so they can go home. Jobs dangerous enough day to day but believe me after 30-40 hours of non stop work in the worse conditions possible NO lineman is having fun or trying to stretch it out to get a bit more overtime pay. heres a fact to chew on if your procrastinating purchasing a generator and im sure lightman will agree. ITS GOING TO GET WORSE. Most utilitys have cut back drastically on personal because companys had to keep profitable. Its tough to get a rate increase today. Add to that that there not only making personal cuts but have had to trim there maintenance budgets and our power grid is in very poor shape and is going to get worse not better. I wouldn't be afraid to bet that 10 years from now your average customer is going to see his yearly outage times doubled. We went from 10 lineman at our shop to 5 in the last ten years. Maintenance? 35 years ago When I started we probably spent half or hours doing maitanance and rebuilds. In the last 10 year I worked there we were told if the powers flowing and the problem isn't causing a safety risk to drive on by. Fix it when it breaks. I retired 10 years ago. today those 5 lineman are down to 3 and its barely enough to keep the street lights working and new customers services hooked up. Bottom line is you can either have cheap power or unreliable power. Most choose cheap

  12. #12
    Boolit Master
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    Installed a generator in 2010. Best thing I ever did. Water , lights, fridge, and of course the coffee maker. Hot water runs on propane. No electric needed. Longest power outage here was 5 days. The generator has been used about 9 times since I installed it. Happy wife happy life.

  13. #13
    Boolit Buddy Ateam's Avatar
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    Anyone use a PTO generator on a tractor? Been thinking about getting one for the 30hp kubota.

  14. #14
    Boolit Buddy

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    Had a dairy farmer neighbor that used one when power was down, had a disconnect and plug at utility pole to run house, shop and to milk with, ran the milk cooler also.

  15. #15
    Boolit Grand Master

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    Quote Originally Posted by Three44s View Post
    I for one really admire and appreciate power company linemen. Lightman, thank you for the unsung work you did during your career and thank you to all other retired and current line folks!

    It sure ain’t a job for sissies. I have never climbed a pole but I have on occasion climbed our well drill mast and can tell those that have never done so can be thankful they missed the opportunity. I had the regular safety harness and climbing belt but the “killer” for me was how much your legs and feet ache during and after a long climb.

    And then there are the inherent dangers of electrocution.

    Three44s
    Thanks for the kind words, Brother!

  16. #16
    Boolit Grand Master

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lloyd Smale View Post
    I was a lineman for over 30 years. I know how outages go and especially wide spread outages. You can get a generator that will run your whole house in an emergency for the cost of one gun or a decent scope. Like lightman I no longer have access to a truck or the ability to prioritize my home in an outage. We don't have outages as long as hes seen but I have seen 3 day outages and just the contents of my 3 freezers is worth more then the one time cost of a generator. Told my wife a few years ago when we had a couple day outage that just being able to have a cup of coffee that morning paid for the generator in my eyes. that said when your home a thing its miserable being without your coffee pot or tv remember theres lineman out there in the rain, lightning and snow that are a lot more miserable then you and want that outage over much more they you do so they can go home. Jobs dangerous enough day to day but believe me after 30-40 hours of non stop work in the worse conditions possible NO lineman is having fun or trying to stretch it out to get a bit more overtime pay. heres a fact to chew on if your procrastinating purchasing a generator and im sure lightman will agree. ITS GOING TO GET WORSE. Most utilitys have cut back drastically on personal because companys had to keep profitable. Its tough to get a rate increase today. Add to that that there not only making personal cuts but have had to trim there maintenance budgets and our power grid is in very poor shape and is going to get worse not better. I wouldn't be afraid to bet that 10 years from now your average customer is going to see his yearly outage times doubled. We went from 10 lineman at our shop to 5 in the last ten years. Maintenance? 35 years ago When I started we probably spent half or hours doing maitanance and rebuilds. In the last 10 year I worked there we were told if the powers flowing and the problem isn't causing a safety risk to drive on by. Fix it when it breaks. I retired 10 years ago. today those 5 lineman are down to 3 and its barely enough to keep the street lights working and new customers services hooked up. Bottom line is you can either have cheap power or unreliable power. Most choose cheap
    Lloyd is correct on everything he mentioned. I guess all companies are cutting back, trying to reduce operating cost. Most electric utility companies are ruled by their states public service commission. They are not guaranteed a profit but rather their profit is limited. I think its 10% in Arkansas. Its a struggle to even get close to that. Tree trimming budgets are the first to get cut followed by maintenance.

    Maintenance! I hate to even get started. The last years I worked the policy was to fix it after it failed, not before. Or if it was dangerous to the public. The unofficial stance was that its never dangerous to the public! As a Serviceman I would do maintanance on slow days. Sometimes teaming up with another Serviceman. We finally got so short that we never had a slow day. And safety rules and OSHA regs changed to the point that one man alone was so restricted on what he was allowed to do that most maintenance was impossible to do. If I told you about the paper work required to do even the simplest task you would walk away shaking your head. Like Lloyd, our shop went from 9 Linemen, a storekeeper, a clerk and a foreman to 2 men currently. The storekeeper and clerk routinely work multiple crew centers.



    Sadly, outages will get to more common and last longer.

  17. #17
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ateam View Post
    Anyone use a PTO generator on a tractor? Been thinking about getting one for the 30hp kubota.
    I have one for my Kubota 3410. I got it from Northern tools 6 weeks before a hurricane had us down for 8 days. It would run the whole house as long as I was careful about too many high current appliances at the same time. I have a small generator for those 3 to 5 hour outages. I burned $450 of diesel in those 8 days at $4.25 a gallon, but the AC never stopped.
    There is no difference between communism and socialism, except in the means of achieving the same ultimate end: communism proposes to enslave men by force, socialism—by vote. It is merely the difference between murder and suicide. Ayn Rand

  18. #18
    Boolit Grand Master

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    Quote Originally Posted by Ateam View Post
    Anyone use a PTO generator on a tractor? Been thinking about getting one for the 30hp kubota.

    A PTO driven generator will work fine. The issue is the time and work required to connect and disconnect it. I've seen many of them attached to a small dedicated trailer so that they automatically line up with the PTO at the correct distance and are easy to move. Hook the trailer up to the drawbar, connect the driveshaft, connect the power cord and its ready to use. Another minor issue, sometimes not so minor, is fuel. The fuel issue can be a problem for any portable generator.

  19. #19
    Boolit Master
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    We don't have a lot of problems with long power outages in this part of the country but they do happen. The longest was when Hugo came through in 1989, about 8 days here and some had it worse. When the linemen came through they tried to apologize for the inconvenience, not necessary and thank you, I got a funny look. They looked beat I felt I was having it better than they were.

    I the 80's if it snowed very much we lost power almost every time, usually for 2 maybe 3 days at the most. Now the lines are kept trimmed better so not so many problems. I couldn't afford a generator but would prepare the best I could. I had a 55 gal barrel with water for sanitary use and another small one for drinking water, kept a Coleman stove, heated with wood ,kept some lanterns and if necessary packed snow in the frig drawers or store food outside. If I knew it was coming I would get as ready as possible. I had two small children to care for and needed to be ready.

    I now have a small generator for the frig and freezer but still but still have everything in place. You don't need a large budget to prepare, there are a lot of things you can do.

    Dave

  20. #20
    Boolit Grand Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ateam View Post
    Anyone use a PTO generator on a tractor? Been thinking about getting one for the 30hp kubota.
    I decided against one a few days ago as I am looking at my options. Following reasons:
    First, you need to run them at 540 RPM and that is near full throttle. They cannot be "dialed down". Which leads to...
    Second, if your throttle slips while running unattended, you will not get the voltage you need....can burn out motors.
    Third, during an outage, I want to have my tractor available for emergency work that may be needed.
    Fourth, can your wife/girlfriend/kids hook it up if you are gone?
    Fifth, if away from home, you still have no power for critical things like a sump pump (mine runs every 3 minutes in the spring), fridge, furnace etc

    My current thoughts are to add a 9-11KW LP automatic unit, and buy a small 2000 watt inverter for the cell phone booster, a few LED lights, sump pump, furnace, TV, and computer. The inverters (https://powerequipment.honda.com/gen...models/eu2200i) will run 8 hours on a gallon of fuel. Most of the time, that should more than enough power. When I am home, I would cycle the large LP unit for an hour every 5-6 hours during the day to power up the well pump, stove, freezers and fridge. Running the LP unit full time would use about 25 gal/day and is going to cost about $40/day. With the addition of the small inverter, I will have power for $15/day. The inverter will also be handy for camping and running small tools where an extension cord does not make sense.

    The longest outage in my area has been 10 days. But like others have posted, the gird is getting worse not better. I have a 500 gal LP tank. If I only use the LP generator, a long outage in the winter will require a refill, and that may be problematic. Adding a second tank will cost as much as the inverter.
    Don Verna


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